Francis Louis Barrallier (19 October 1773 – 11 June 1853) was a French-born explorer of Australia.
Life and career
editFrancis Barrallier was born in Toulon, France, on 19 October 1773, and baptised Louis Francois Barralier [sic].[1] He was the eldest son of Jean-Louis Barrallier, a marine engineer and Royalist supporter, and Marie-Antoinette-Francoise Hernandez. The family escaped to the United Kingdom in 1793 during the Siege of Toulon by the Republicans.[2] They lived for a time at Milford Haven, in Pembrokeshire, where Jean was employed designing the new port. Francis was trained by his father in engineering and surveying.[2]
Having acquired the patronage of the politician Charles Greville, Francis arrived in New South Wales in November 1799 with hopes of employment.[3] At first he was given miscellaneous tasks including the design of a proposed orphanage at Parramatta.[4] In July 1800 the outgoing Governor of NSW, John Hunter, appointed him an ensign in the New South Wales Corps.[5]
In March 1801 Governor Phillip Gidley King sent him with Lieutenant James Grant in HMS Lady Nelson to further explore, survey and map Bass Strait.[6] Barrallier's resulting maps of Jervis Bay, Western Port[7] and some of Bass Strait[8] were recognised by Governor King, who made him the Colony's engineer and artillery officer.[9]
Again in the role of surveyor, in June 1801 he sailed to the Hunter River in an expedition led by Colonel William Paterson.[3] He made a survey of Coal Harbour (now Newcastle) and part of the Hunter and Williams Rivers.[10] Later that year he made a second trip there with surveyor Charles Grimes, and with him surveyed part of the Paterson River.[3]
In October–November 1802 Governor King engaged Barrallier as his personal aide-de-camp, and in that capacity he was directed to try to find a way over the Blue Mountains to the west of Sydney.[3] After a preliminary reconnaissance in September-October, he mounted a major expedition in November, employing a bullock cart to take provisions to a depot that he set up northwest of today’s town of Picton. From there he made three incursions into the mountains, accompanied by soldiers, convicts and Aboriginal assistants. The first terminated prematurely in the Burragorang Valley when his principal guide, the Dharawal man Gogy, found himself unwelcome amongst the Gundungurra people whose country they had entered. On the second incursion, with two different Aboriginal assistants, Badbury (Boodbury) and Le Tonsure, he penetrated further west but eventually turned around at Johnston Falls in Wheengee Whungee Creek, six kilometres southwest of Kanangra Walls. The party was short of supplies and low on morale and was far short of crossing the mountains. After a third unsuccessful incursion, which involved an attempt to follow the Wollondilly River upstream, Barrallier returned to Sydney. The expedition had taken 51 days altogether.[3]
During the expedition Barrallier wrote letters to Governor King,[11][3] and subsequently wrote a long journal, in French.[12] These documents provide an important record of his encounters with the First Nations people he met or who accompanied him, and reveal that Barrallier had an uncommon understanding of their ownership of country. It is likely that his attitudes were influenced in part by his encounters with members of the French Baudin expedition, which visited Sydney in the months before the expedition.[3]
Barrallier made the first record of the brush-tailed rock-wallaby (Petrogale penicillata), which he encountered while trying to scale Tonalli Peak in the Burragorang Valley. He also displayed some knowledge of the science of geology.[3] He also reported the traditional “coo-ee” call, though he was not the first to do so, as the call had been reported by Captain John Hunter in 1789, while on the Hawkesbury River.[13]
In May 1803 Barrallier fell victim of the feuding between Governor King and the New South Wales Corps, and was dismissed as aide-de-camp. He submitted his resignation from the army and left for England. His resignation was never accepted, probably due to the support of Captain John Macarthur and Sir Jospeh Banks. He undertook further training in the hope he would return to NSW as surveyor general, but was disappointed in that ambition.[3]
In 1805 he was appointed a lieutenant in the 90th Regiment and the following year joined the regiment at St Vincent in the West Indies, where he was engaged as engineer in charge of building fortifications.[14][15][16] In 1809 he earned a silver medal for his role in the capture of the island of Martinique from the French, and was made a captain in the 101st Regiment. He was then appointed aide-de-camp to General Sir George Beckwith, commander of the English forces in the West Indies, and in 1810 earned another silver medal for his role in the capture of Guadeloupe.[17][14]
In 1812 Barrallier was instructed to make a survey of Barbados, a task which occupied several years during which he was appointed surveyor general of the island.[14]
He returned to England in 1816 after the war with France concluded, and spent most of the rest of his life on half-pay, gradually advancing to Brevet Lieutenant Colonel.[18] He lived mainly in England, but also in France, having married the English girl Isabel Skyrme in 1819.[19]
In 1827 he published his map of Barbados.[20][21] This has proved to be significant in the campaign for restorative justice for the people of Barbados, a former slave colony, for it lists the names of all the English owners of the plantations of the time.[22]
Francis Barrallier died in London on 11 June 1853, aged nearly eighty.[23] Barrallier Island, a tiny islet that he would have visited in Western Port, was named after him. Several places in the Blue Mountains also carry his name.[3]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Register of the Church of St Louis, Toulon, 1773 p58.
- ^ a b H. J. Steward (August 2006). "A Life in Context" (PDF). International Cartographic Association. Retrieved 31 July 2012.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Macqueen, Andy (2024), The Frenchman: Francis Barrallier life and journeys 1773-1853. Wentworth Falls, NSW: Andy Macqueen.
- ^ Orphan House Committee Minutes, 15 September 1800. Historical Records of NSW, V4, p138.
- ^ King to Portland, 28 September 1800. Historical Records of NSW, V4, p197.
- ^ King to Grant, 5 March 1801. Historical Records of NSW, V4, pp305-309.
- ^ Barrallier, Francis (1801), Chart of Western Port and connections of it with Wilson's Promontory : forming a part of the north side of Bass's Straits. Retrieved 12 October 2024.
- ^ Barrallier, Francis (c1802] Chart of Bass’s Straits shewing the tracks and discoveries of vessels …. Published by A Dalrymple, 1803. Retrieved on 12 October 2024.
- ^ King to Under Secretary, 21 August 1801. Historical Records of NSW, V4, p503.
- ^ Barrallier, Francis (1801), Coal harbour and rivers on the coast of New South Wales surveyed by Ensign Barrallier in the Lady Nelson in June and July 1801 [with] remarks on Hunter's River. Retrieved 12 October 2024.
- ^ Barrallier to King, 21 November 1802. State Library of NSW, A1908/2. Retrieved 12 October 2024.
- ^ Barrallier, Francis (c1805), Journal of the expedition into the interior of New South Wales 1802 by Francis Louis Barrallier : A revised transcription & translation by Milena Bellini-Sheppard. Wentworth Falls, NSW : Andy Macqueen, 2024. Retrieved 12 October 2024.
- ^ Hunter, John (1968), An Historical Journal of Events at Sydney and at Sea 1787-1792, with further accounts... Sydney: Angus & Robertson.
- ^ a b c Great Britain (1821), Service Record of Francis Louis Barrallier. UK National Archives, WO25/750/122.
- ^ Delavoye, Alex (1880), Records of the 90th Regiment (Perthshire Light Infantry). London: Richardson & Co.
- ^ Colburn, Henry (1853), Francis Barrallier: obituary. In United Service Magazine, Hurst & Blackett, July 1853, p632.
- ^ Great Britain (1812-1814), Returns of the 101st Foot. UK National Archives, WO25/553.
- ^ Great Britain (1800-1853), Annual Army Lists.
- ^ Marriage register of St Mary Lambeth, Surrey. 876 of 1819.
- ^ Barrallier, Francis (1827), Trigonometrical Survey of Barbados. In six sheets, engraved by J&C Walker and published by Francis Barrallier. UK National Archives, CO700/Barbados 10.
- ^ Webster, Jim (2020), The Printed Maps of Barbados 1500-1900. Retrieved 12 October 2024.
- ^ Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British Slavery, University College of London.
- ^ District of Stepney, death register. June 1853, vol 1c, p353.